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Highlights from
The Computer Museum Report Winter/1983
Contents of Highlights
The IBM ASCC (Automatic Sequence
Controlled Calculator), also known as the
Harvard Mark 1, began in the mind of
Harvard instructor Howard Aiken, and was
realized by a team representing Harvard, the
U.S. Navy and IBM.
"The desire to economize time and mental
effort in arithmetical computation, and to
eliminate human liability to error, is
probably as old as the science of arithmetic
itself . . .
"The intensive development of mathematical
and physical sciences in recent years has
included the definition of many new and
useful functions, nearly all of which are
defined by infinite series or other infinite
processes. Most of these are tabulated
inadequately and their application to
scientific problems is retarded thereby.
"The increased accuracy of physical
measurement has made necessary more
accurate computation. Many of the most
recent scientific developments are based on
nonlinear effects. All too often the
differential equations designed to represent
these physical phenomena may be solved only
by numerical integration. This method
involves an enormous amount of
computational labor. Many of the
computational difficulties with which the
physical and mathematical sciences are faced
can be removed by the use of suitable
automatic calculating machinery.
"The development of numerical analysis,
including the techniques of numerical
differentiation and integration, and methods
for solving ordinary and partial differential
equations have reduced, in effect, the
processes of mathematical analysis to
selected sequences of the five fundamental
operations of arithmetic: addition,
subtraction, multiplication, division, and
reference to tables of previously computed
results. The automatic sequence controlled
calculator was designed to carry out any
selected sequence of these operations under'
completely automatic control."
Howard Aiken and Grace Hopper 1946 Electrical
Engineering
Inspired by Charles Babbage's nineteenth-
century "Analytical Engine," the Harvard
Mark I was mostly mechanical. Counter
wheels were electro-mechanical, and
connections between units were electrical.
An external program punched on tape
controlled operation; conditional branches
were not possible when the machine was
first in operation. The machine was largely
built of standard IBM equipment. It was
completed at IBM in 1943, and moved to
Harvard in 1944.
The Harvard Mark I's contribution was not
in its technology-the electronic ENIAC,
which would surpass the Harvard Mark I's
speed by several orders of magnitude, was
under construction when the Mark I was
being dedicated.
Re-assembling the machine at Harvard, March
10, 1944.
"It is important because it was the first
large scale digital calculator ever built
and also because it stimulated the
imagination and interest of the world and
thus gave impetus to the desire for more
and better computing machines."
G. Truman Hunter, "Modern Computing
Machines," Journal of the Franklin Institute,
1952.
"If you hated Hitler enough, you would
fight on against fearful odds. You
considered not just the small probability of
success, but the large payoff if you were
successful."
1. J. Good, "Pioneering Work on Computers at
Bletchley" in A History of Computing in the
Twentieth Century, ed. N. Metropolis, J.
Howlett, and Gian-Carlo Rota, New York,
1980.
Pulley from a Col tape drive.
(Gift of Toby Harper, X49.82.)
This spirit motivated the British Foreign
Office's cryptanalytic effort at Bletchley
Park. German forces relied on variants of
the ENIGMA machine for enciphering in
World War II. The simplest version of the
ENIGMA had 9 x 102ø initial settings, so
breaking the cipher was an awesomely
complex process. The British built a series
of machines to decipher intercepted
German messages. The culmination of the
series was the Colossus line, electronic
machines with many of the features of the
computer, including electronic circuits for
Boolean logic, counting, and binary
arithmetic; automatic operation, with logic
functions set with plugs and switches, or
conditionally selected by electro-
mechanical relays; and electronic registers
changeable by an automatically controlled
sequence of operations.
The first official release of information on
the Colossus was not until 1975. Because
of this secrecy, the Colossus did not
directly influence the computer projects
which flourished in England and the
United States after the war. The Bletchley
Park effort, however, did turn out a number
of scientists experienced in electronics and
logic. F C. Williams, head of the postwar
Manchester University computer project,
remembered help he received from two
Bletchley alumni who were also familiar
with American computer projects: "Tom
Kilburn and I knew nothing about
computers, but a lot about circuits.
Professor Newman and Mr. A. M. Turing
in the Mathematics Department knew a lot
about computers and substantially nothing
about electronics. They took us by the
hand and explained how numbers could
live in houses with addresses and how if
they did they could be kept track of during
a calculation."
F C. Williams, "Early Computers at
Manchester University" Radio and Electronic
Engineer, 1975
Intercepted German messages were punched on
paper tape and read into the Colossus
photoelectrically
"The value of the work I am sure to
engineers like myself and possibly to
mathematicians like Alan Turing, was
that we acquired a new understanding of
and familiarity with logical switching and
processing because of the enhanced
possibilities brought about by electronic
technologies which we ourselves developed
Thus when stored program computers
became known to us we were able to go
right ahead with their development."
T H. Flowers, letter to Brian Randell, February
15, 1972; quoted in B. Randell, "The
Colossus," in A History of Computing in the
Twentieth Century, ed. N. Metropolis, J.
Howlett, and Gian-Carlo Rota, New York,
1980.
Each of these earlier machines had some of
the features of the electronic computer. In
the ENIAC, these features-electronic,
highspeed operation, general-purpose
capability, and program controlwere
combined. It is usually regarded as the first
true electronic computer. The major difference
between the ENIAC and later computers was
that it was programmed by plugs and switches,
rather than running a stored program.
The ENIAC, funded by the Army Ballistics
Research Laboratory at the University of
Pennsylvania's Moore School, used electronics
on an unprecedented scale. Its 18,000 vacuum
tubes belied the criticism that, given the failure
rate of vacuum tubes, one or more tubes would
fail before a computation was completed. The
success of electronics for large-scale
computation inspired a number of postwar
computer projects.
The ENIAC was moved to the Army's
Aberdeen Proving Ground after a year of
operation at the Moore School. R. F
Clippinger, a mathematician who devised some
of the first applications at Aberdeen, recalled:
"I had a couple of girls with desk
calculators working out the test case that I
would use to find out if I was getting the
right answers from the ENIAC. It took
them two man-years to do one solution. We
put it on the ENIAC, and the ENIAC ran off
a case very hour...
"You have to realize that the Aberdeen
Proving Ground was the
cradle of a whole lot of computers: the
EDVAC, ORDVAC, and a bunch of others.
But even after they were delivered, the
ENIAC continued to work for about ten
years. There was a period when the ENIAC
was the only computer working. A lot of
others were on the drawing boards or in the
mill being engineered, but not working."
R. F Clippinger, gallery talk at the Computer
Museum, September 26, 1982
The ENIAC team, headed by J. Presper
Eckert and John Mauchly, included a
dozen engineers and programmers.
Designer Arthur Burks looks on as a
program is set up on the ENIAC with
plugs and switches.
The EDVAC was the successor to the
ENIAC. While the ENIAC was being built,
its designers realized the potential of the
stored program. They began designing a
new computer, and were soon joined by
distinguished mathematician John von
Neumann.
The question "Who invented the
program?" has been answered many ways.
It cannot be attributed to any single
person, but seems to have arisen in the
course of conversations among ENIAC
project members; other researchers may
also have independently conceived the
idea. Arthur Burks, who worked on the
ENIAC, beginning of the EDSAC, and with
John von Neumann on the IAS computer,
made this assessment of the process of
making the stored program practical.
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"There were two main steps. Pres and
John (Eckert and Mauchly of ENIAC)
invented the circulating mercury delay
line store, with enough capacity to store
program information as well as data.
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Von
Neumann created the first modern order
code and worked out the logical design of
an electronic computer to execute it."
Arthur W Burks, "From ENIAC to the Stored-
Program Computer," in A History of
Computing in the Twentieth Century, ed. N.
Metropolis, J. Howlett, and Gian-Carlo Rota,
New York, 1980.
The mercury delay line memory, borrowed
from radar to utilize as computer memory,
was the key device that made the stored
program practical. The ENIAC had only
twenty words high-speed memory
capacity, using expensive vacuum tubes-
far too few to store programs and data. In
contrast, each delay line could hold
hundreds of words, with bits circulating as
ultrasonic pulses in a column of mercury.
When each bit reached the end of the
column, it was converted to an electrical
signal, where it was cleaned up and could
be read.
Von Neumann's write-up of the EDVAC
group's discussions
was widely circulated in draft. The Moore
School's 1946 summer lecture series on the
EDVAC design also helped publicize the
idea of the stored program computer. The
EDVAC, while still in its design stage,
directly or indirectly influenced all postwar
computer projects.
The EDVAC's theoretical design and
construction stage lasted from 1944 to 1951.
John von Neumann left the EDVAC project
to return to the Institute for Advanced
Study bringing with him Arthur Burks and
Herman Goldstine. The three elaborated
stored program computer design with the
draft of "Preliminary Discussions of the
Logical Design of an Electronic Computing
Instrument."
The IAS Computer introduced
asynchronous operation. For fast memory
it used the Williams tube, a CRT memory
developed at Manchester University. The
Williams tube was used in serial mode at
Manchester; the IAS Computer was first to
use it in parallel.
One of the IAS Computer's most
significant contributions was as a pattern
for other computer projects. Julian
Bigelow, who was the computer's chief
designer, recounts:
"Another feature of
the arrangement for financial support [by
military agencies and the Atomic Energy
Commission] provided that, as sections of
the computer were successfully developed,
working drawings would be sent out by
our engineering group to five other
development centers supported by similar
government contracts, notably to Los
Alamos Laboratory, the University of
Illinois, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Argonne National Laboratory and the
Rand Corporation. For the first year or so
this requirement that what we produced
was in effect going to be duplicated at five
distinguished laboratories elsewhere
added to the anxieties of the IAS team,
especially since these correspondents were
mostly well established and supported by
facilities and resources wholly lacking
chez nous. We anticipated that any
mistakes we might make in sending out
piecewise the fruits of our efforts would
thereby be exposed to possibly hostile or
competitive criticism, leaving us no place
to hide, but in fact problems of this sort
never arose, and communication with all
people at these laboratories was entirely
friendly and stimulating."
Julian Bigelow, "Computer Development at
I.A.S. Princeton," in A History of Computing
in the Twentieth Century, ed. N. Metropolis,
J. Howlett, and Gian-Carlo Rota, New York,
1980.
The IAS computer.
"The EDSAC is based on principles first
enunciated in an unpublished report . . . in
which ideas for a machine known as the
EDVAC were set out."
Maurice Wilkes "Programme Design for a
High Speed Automatic Calculating
Machine," Journal of Scientific
Instruments 1949.
By 1949, a number of computers were
underway. Maurice Wilkes, Director of
Computation at Cambridge University, was
the first to complete a machine with the
first program running on May 6th of that
year. Maurice Wilkes started the project on
his return from the 1946 Moore School
lectures on the EDVAC design. Returning
to Cambridge University, he set up the
Computation Laboratory and started work
on a stored program computer. Wilkes used
existing technologies to get a machine up
and running. His decision on memory
technology was characteristic of this design
philosophy: "We used the mercury delay-
line because it was really the only thing
you could count on at the time."
Maurice Wilkes, gallery talk, at The
Computer Museum, July 7, 1982
EDSAC memory delay lines plugged into
this tank cover. (On loan from the Science
Museum, London.)
"We realized that building the machine
was only the start of the project; that there
was a great deal to be learnt about writing
programs, about how to use the machine for
numerical analysis, numerical calculation,
and all the rest of it . . . As soon as we
started programming, we found to our
surprise that it wasn't as easy to get
programs right as we had thought.
Debugging had to be discovered. I can
remember the exact instant when I realized
that a large part of my life from then on
was going to be spent in finding mistakes
in my own programs."
Maurice Wilkes, Pioneer
Computer Lecture, The Computer
Museum, September 21, 1979
Valves (the English equivalent of vacuum
tubes) on the EDSAC memory driver.
Maurice Wlkes is on the back cover
holding the memory driver's wiring. (On
loan from the Science Museum, London.)
Computer work began at Manchester University in
late 1946. F C. Williams and Thomas Kilburn's first
project was to build a new kind of memory, one that
was large enough to store programs and data, but
faster than the mercury delay line.
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Several
investigators, most notably Jan Rajchman of RCA,
had been working on cathode-ray tube memory.
Williams and Kilburn solved a major drawback to
the CRT, i.e., that the charged spots that
represented bits only stayed on the screen for a
few instants before dissipating.
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"Looking back, it
is amazing how long it took to realize the fact that
if one can read a record once, then that is entirely
sufficient for storage, provided that what is read
can be immediately rewritten in its original
position."
F C. Williams and T Kilburn, paper presented at
Manchester University Computer Inaugural
Conference, 1951
The Manchester group built an experimental
prototype to test the Williams tube. The "baby
machine" ran its first program in June 1948. The
machine was expanded in several stages, and the
full-scale computer was complete in late 1949.
Williams described its not-quite-automatic
operation:
"The two-level store [fast Williams tube and slow
magnetic drum] I have referred to was indeed
on two levels. The electronic store was in the
magnetism room and the magnetic store in the
room above. Transfers between the stores were
achieved by setting switches, then running to the
bottom of the stairs and shouting, 'We are ready to
receive track 17 on tube 1.' The process was
repeated for tube 2 and the machine set working.
When the machine wished to disgorge
information, it stopped and the reverse process was
initiated."
F C. Williams, "Early Computers at Manchester
University, Radio and Electronic Engineer, 1975
Graduate student Dai Edwards. A Williams tube set in
the machine can be seen in the foreground.
Williams tube memory was borrowed by several
computers of the day including the IAS Computer.
Julian Bigelow, head of engineering design for the
IAS project, recalled his visit to see the Manchester
Computer in its early state:
"My visit to Manchester was a delightful
experience; E C. Williams was a true example of
the British 'string and sealing wax' inventive
genius, who had built a primitive electronic
computer from surplus World War II radar parts
strictly on his own inspirationin the middle of
which were two cathode-ray tubes storing digits in
serial access mode-the 'Williams memory.' l can
remember him explaining it to me, when there was
a flash and a puff of smoke and everything went
dead, but Williams was unperturbed, turned off the
power, and with a handy soldering iron, replaced a
few dangling wires and resistors so that
everything was working again in a few minutes."
Julian Bigelow, "Computer Development at I.A.S.
Princeton," in A History of Computing in the
Twentieth Century, ed. N. Metropolis, J. Howlett,
and Gian-Carlo Rota, New York, 1980
After the war, Britain's National Physical
Laboratory began a computer project. Alan
Turing, who had written a paper on
machine intelligence in 1936 and
participated in the Bletchley Park
cryptoanalytic effort, was the central figure
in the early days of the NPL project. In the
words of the NPL's director, "About twelve
years ago, a young Cambridge
mathematician, by name Turing, wrote a
paper in which he worked out by strict
logical principles how far a machine could
be imagined which would imitate processes
of thought. It was an idealized machine he
was considering, and at that time it looked
as if it could never possibly be made. But
the great developments in wireless and
electronic valves during the war have
altered the picture. Consequently Turing,
who is now on our staff, is showing us how
to make his idea come true."
Sir Charles Darwin, BBC broadcast, 1946
Turing designed several versions of a
computer, but left the NPL in 1947. An NPL
team directed by J. H. Wilkinson built a
pilot version of the ACE, which embodied
Turing's highly original design philosophy.
Turing summed it up in a 1947 conference
discussion: "We are trying to make greater
use of the facilities available in the
machine to do all kinds of different things
simply by programming rather than by the
addition of extra apparatus."
Discussion of "Transfer Between External and
Internal Memory" by C. Bradford Sheppard,
Proceedings of a Symposium on Large-Scale
Digital Calculating Machinery, Cambridge,
Mass., 1947.
From Alan Turings ACE notebook. "In the
ACE, we intend to represent all numbers
in the binary system . . . Every number may
be represented in the binary system by a
sequence of digits each of which is either
a zero or a one, and this provides us with
a particularly simple method of
representing a number electrically."
J. H. Wilkinson, Progress Report on the
Automatic Computing Engine, Mathematics
Division, National Physical Laboratory, 1948.
Before any of the stored program computers had been completed, the National
Bureau of Standards decided to procure two computers for its own use. After
reviewing university projects and proposals from nascent computer companies,
Standards decided to build their own machines.
SEAC console.
The SEAC (Standards Eastern Automatic Computer), built in Washington, had
two aims. One was to be operational as soon as possible to run programs for the
Bureau of Standards. The second
objective was to be a laboratory for testing components and systems, since the
Bureau of Standards might be called on to set standards relating to computers.
SWAC (Standards Western Automatic Computer) was built at the Institute for
Numerical Analysis in Los Angeles. Its main objective was to be finished as
soon as possible, using as much alreadydeveloped technology as possible.
Project leader Harry Huskey wrote, "The plan was to build a computer with the
minimum of circuit development. Thus, the circuits in the arithmetic unit were
derived from Whirlwind circuits, and the development of the memory circuits
depended heavily on the published work of F C. Williams of Manchester
University."
Harry D. Huskey, "The National Bureau of Standards Western Automatic Computer
(SWAC)," in A History of Computing in the Twentieth Century, ed. N. Metropolis, J.
Howlett, and Gian-Carlo Rota, New York, 1980
SEAC was the first computer to use all-diode logic, pointing the way for the solid-
state computers of later years. Diodes were much more reliable than vacuum
tubes. The SEAC, however, required a good deal of maintenance, like all
computers of the day: "We actually had much more trouble from bad solder
joints than we ever had from vacuum tubes, diodes, or delay lines. I can well
remember that we
established two standard debugging techniques. After about two hours a day of
preventive maintenance, we would stmt a test program running. Then we applied
the 'stir with a wooden spoon technique, which consisted of taking something
like a wooden spoon and going around the computer, tapping everything you
could see. If the test program stopped, you had found something. When that test
was finally passed, we applied the Bureau of Standards' 'standard jump.' We
were in a building with wooden floors that were not difficult to shake, so the
standard jump consisted of jumping up in the air about 15 cm and coming down
on the floor as hard as possible. If that test was passed, the machine was ready to
tackle a computational program-and even more interesting bugs would show
up."
Ralph J. Slutz, "Memories of the
Bureau of Standards' SEAC," in A
History of Computing in the Twentieth Century, ed. N. Metropolis, J.
Howlett, and Gian-Carlo Rota,
New York, 1980
SEAC was the first of stored program computer to be completed in the United
States, followed shortly by SWAC. With the first English computers, the
Standards computers reassured workers on other contemporary computer
projects of their feasibility.
SWAC block diagram.
In 1944, the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology contracted with the Navy to
build a universal aircraft flight
simulator/trainer. Jay Forrester of the M. 1.
T Servomechanisms Lab became director
of the project. By 1945, the original
conception of an analog machine was
dropped, and the Navy approved construction of a digital computer
in 1946. A general-purpose computer could
take care of not only flight simulation
calculations, but a variety of other
scientific and engineering applications.
Whirlwind was completed in stages; the
entire central machine was working in 1951.
The most important legacy of the flight-
simulator concept was Whirlwind's real-
time design. To allow the instantaneous
response needed for flight simulation,
Whirlwind originally used its own version
of cathode-ray tube memory, at that time
the fastest available type of memory. It was
also, in the words of a 1952 project
summary report, "the most important
factor affecting reliability of the
Whirlwind I system."
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M.I.T. Project Whirlwind, Summary Report
#31, 1952, p. 6. Institute, Archives and Special
Collections, M.LT Libraries, Cambridge, MA.
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An elaborate system of marginal checking
identified hardware problems before they
affected computational accuracy.
At the same time, new military applications
which demanded higher-than-ever
reliability were emerging. The Cold War
was at its height, and the U.S. military was on guard
against atomic attack. Whirlwind, funded
by the Office of Naval Research and then
by the Air Force, was part of the defense
network; the production version of the
Whirlwind II design, named AN/FSQ-7,
was to become part of the SAGE System.
Project members, dissatisfied with CRT
memory performance, researched a
substitute.
Several researchers in the late 1940s,
including Jay Forrester, conceived the idea
of using magnetic cores for computer
memory. William Papian of Project
Whirlwind cited one of these efforts,
Harvard's "Static Magnetic Delay Line," in
an internal memo. Core memory was
installed on Whirlwind in the summer of
1953. "Magnetic-Core Storage has two big
advantages: (1) greater reliability with a
consequent reduction in maintenance time
devoted to storage; (2) shorter access time
(core access time is 9 microseconds; tube
access time is approximately
25 microseconds) thus increasing the
speed of computer operation."
M.I.T. Project Whirlwind, Summary Report
#35, 1953, p. 33. Institute Archives and Special
Collections, M.LT Libraries, Cambridge, MA.
Whirlwind was thus the first
full-scale computer to run on core memory
the mainstay of primary memories until the
1970s.
| . | Start up | Completion | Program | Word length
| Memory size (words) | Add time | Memory type [secondary]
| I/O | Technology | Floor space est. sq. ft.
|
| Bell Labs Model I
George Stibitz at
Bell Telephone
Laboratories
| 1939 | 10/39 | 4 function, complex arithmetic calculator
| 8 digits
| 4 working registers | 6s for complex x (4 products)
| none | Teletype or paper tape | 450 relays | 50
|
Zuse Z3
Konrad Zuse
| 1939 | 1941 | punched film | 22 bits, flt. Pt.
| 64 | 2s | relays | punched film, keyboard, lights | 2600 relays | 100
|
ABC
John Vincent Atanasoff
and Clifford Berry at
Iowa State University
| 12/37 | 12/39 prototype 1942 | fixed, equation solver | 50 bits
| 2 x (30 + 2 spare) | 32 in 1s | drum of capacitors | cards
| vacuum tubes | 12.5
|
IBM ASCC
Harvard Mark I
| 1937 | 8/44 | punched tape, function table, plugboard
| 23 digits also double precision
| 72 counters 60 switches | .3s | relays, switches
| paper tape, cards, typewriters | relays, motor-driven cam,clock
| 51 ft long, lg. room
|
Colossus (Mark I & II)
Bletchley Park | 1943 | 12/43 (I) 5/44 (II)
| telephone plugboard (I), switches (II) | 5 bit characters
| 500 characters | .2ms | 5 hole paper tape, plugboard, keys & cords
| photo-electric paper tape, switches, lights
| 1500 vacuum tubes, relays (I) 2400 vacuum tubes 800 relays (II)
| 200 (II)
|
ENIAC
Moore School,
University of
Pennsylvania
| 1943 | 2/46 | plugboard, switches | 10 digits
| 20 accumulators, 312 function table | .2ms | counter tubes, relays, switches
| cards, lights, switches, plugs | 18,000 vacuum tubes, 1500 relays | 1,000
|
EDVAC
Moore School,
University of Pennsylvania
| 1/44 | 1951 | stored program computer | 44
| 1024 (8 x 128) | .85ms | delay lines, [magnetic drum (1953)]
| paper tape | 3,500 vacuum tubes, 7,000 diodes | 400
|
IAS Computer
Institute for
Advanced Study,
Princeton University
| 6/46 | 7/51 | " | 40
| 1024 | .09ms | crt | Teletype | 2,600 vacuum tubes | 100
|
EDSAC
Maurice Wilkes at
Cambridge University
| 10/46 | 5/49 | " | 36
| 512 | 1.4ms | delay lines | paper tape, teleprinter
| 3,000 vacuum tubes | med. room
|
MANCHESTER U. MARK I
Manchester University
| 1947 | 6/48 prototype 7/49 | " | 40
| 128 + 1024 | 1.8ms | crt, [magnetic drum]
| paper tape, teleprinter, switches | 1,300 vacuum tubes | med. room
|
PILOT ACE
National Physical
Laboratory
Teddington, England
| 10/48 | 5/50 | " | 32
| 352 | .54ms | delay lines | cards | 800 vacuum tubes | 12
|
SEAC
National Bureau
of Standards
| 6/48 | 5/50 | " | 45
| 512 + 512 | .86ms | crt, delay lines, [magnetic tape & wire]
| paper tape, Teletype | 1,290 vacuum tubes, 15,800 diodes | 150
|
SWAC
National Bureau of
Standards
Institute for
Numerical Analysis
| 1/49 | 7/50 | " | 41
| 256 | .064ms | crt, magnetic drum | cards, paper tape
| 2,000 vacuum tubes 2, 500 diodes | 60
|
Whirlwind
Servomechanisms
Laboratory MIT
| 1945 | 1951 | " | 16
| 2048 | .05ms | crt, core (1953), [magnetic drum & tape]
| crt, paper tape, magnetic tape | 4,500 vacuum tubes, 14,800 diodes
| 3,100 lg. rooms
|
Warning: Use of any data on this table without prior checking with the Museum may lead to the proliferation of inaccuracies.
Primary source books with excellent bibliographies,
guiding the reader to great numbers of primary and
secondary sources:
C. Cordon Bell and Allen Newell, Computer Structures: Readings and
Examples, New York, 1971.
B. V Bowden, Editor, Faster than Thought, A Symposium on Digital
Computing Machines, New York, 1966.
N. Metropolis, J. Howlett, and Gian-Carlo Rota, Editors, A History of
Computing in the Twentieth Century, New York, 1980.
Brian Randell, Editor, The Origins of Digital Computers, Selected Papers.
Third Edition, Berlin, 1982.
Bell Telephone Laboratories Model I
George R. Stibitz, videotape of lecture at The Computer Museum, 1980.
George Robert Stibitz papers. Dartmouth College Library.
Archives, Bell Telephone Laboratories.
G. R. Stibitz, "Calculating With Telephone
Equipment." Paper presented at Mathematical Association of America
meeting, Hanover, N.H., 1940.
Zuse Z1, Z3
A replica of the Z3 is on exhibit at the Deutsches Museum, Munich.
Konrad Zuse, videotape of lecture at The Computer Museum, 1981.
K. Zuse, Calculator for Technical and Scientific Calculations Designed According to
a Theoretical Plan. Distributed by the Office of the Publication Board,
Department of Commerce, Washington, D.C. (n.d.).
ABC
A simplified model of the Atanasoff-Berry Computer built by 1. V Atanasoff
is on exhibit at The Computer Museum.
J.V Atanasoff, videotape of lecture at The Computer Museum, 1980.
Archives, Division of Mathematics, National Museum of American
History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C.
IBM ASCC (Harvard Mark I)
Part of the IBM ASCC is on exhibit at the Harvard Computation Laboratory.
Records of the Computation Laboratory. University Archives, Harvard
University Cambridge, Mass.
Archives, Division of Mathematics, National Museum of American
History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
Colossus
T H. Flowers, videotape of lecture at The Computer Museum, 1981.
See also Randell.
ENIAC
Parts of the ENIAC are on exhibit at the University of Michigan, the
National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution, and at The
Computer Museum.
J. G. Brainerd, videotape of lecture at The Computer Museum, 1981.
Arthur C. Burks, videotape of lecture at The Computer Museum, 1982.
R.F Clippinger, audiotape of lecture at The Computer Museum, 1982.
"The ENIAC Film." Footage of the ENIAC operating in 1946, with
introduction and narration by Arthur Burks. Videotape produced by Arthur
Burks and The Computer Museum, 1982.
ENIAC Archives, Moore School of Electrical Engineering, University of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Archives, Division of Mathematics, National Museum of American
History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
ENIAC Trial Records. United States District Court, District of Minnesota,
Fourth Division: Honeywell, Inc. v Sperry Rand Corp. et al., No. 4-67 Civ.
138, decided October 19, 1973.
F Robert Michael, "Tube Failures in ENIAC," Electronics 20, 1947.
H. W Spence, "Systematization of Tube Surveillance in Large Scale
Computers," Electrical Engineering 70, 1951.
EDVAC
EDVAC Archives, Moore School of Engineering, University of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Archives, Division of Mathematics,
National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C. Donald Eadie, "EDVAC Drum Memory Phase System
of Magnetic Recording." Electrical Engineering 72, 1953. S. E. Cluck, "The
Electronic Discrete Variable Computer." Electrical Engineering 72, 1953.
IAS Computer
The LAS Computer is on exhibit at the National Museum of American
History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
Mathematics and Natural
Sciences Library Institute for Advanced Study Princeton, N.J.
Archives,
Division of Mathematics, National Museum of American History,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
EDSAC
Parts of the EDSAC are on exhibit at The Computer Museum.
M. V Wilkes,
videotape of lecture at The Computer Museum, 1979.
"The EDSAC Film."
Produced by Cambridge University Mathematics Laboratory 1951; with
introduction and narration by M. V Wilkes, 1976.
M. V Wilkes and W
Renwick, "An Ultrasonic Memory Unit for the EDSAC." Electronic
Engineering 20, 1948.
Manchester University Mark I
Parts of the Manchester University Mark I are on exhibit at Manchester
University.
D.B.G. Edwards, videotape of lecture at The Computer
Museum, 1981.
F C. Williams and T Kilburn, "A Storage System for Use
with Binary Digital Computing Machines." Proceedings of the IEE 96, part 2,
1949.
F C. Williams, T Kilburn, and G. C. Tootill, "Universal High-Speed
Digital Computers: A Small-Scale Experimental Machine." Proceedings of
the IEE 98, part 2, 1951.
Pilot ACE
The Pilot ACE is on exhibit at the Science Museum, London.
J. H.
Wilkinson, videotape of lecture at The Computer Museum, 1981.
Archives,
National Physical Laboratory, Teddington, England.
E. A. Newman, D. O.
Clayden, and M. A. Wright, "The Mercury-Delay-Line Storage System of
the ACE Pilot Model Electronic Computer." Proceedings of the IEE 100,
part 2, 1953.
NBS SEAC
Parts of the SEAC are on exhibit at the National Bureau of
Standards Museum. Library Division, National Bureau of Standards,
Washington, D.C.
Archives, Division of Mathematics, National Museum of
American History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
National
Bureau of Standards, MDL Staff, "The Incorporation of Subroutines into a
Complete Problem on the NBS Eastern Automatic Computer." Mathematical
Tables and Other Aids to Computation 4, 1950.
National Bureau of Standards, Electronic Laboratory Staff, "The Operating
Characteristics of the SEAC." Mathematical Tables and Other Aids to
Computation 4, 1950.
S. N. Alexander, "The National Bureau of Standards Eastern Automatic
Computer." Proceedings, Joint AIEE-IRE Computer Conference,
Philadelphia, Pa., 1951.
Alan L. Leiner, "Provisions for Expansion
in the SEAC." Mathematical Tables and Other Aids to Computation 5, 1951.
Ernest F Ainsworth, "Operational Experience with SEAC." Proceedings of
the Joint AIEE-IRE-ACM Computer Conference, New York, December 10-12,
1952.
S. Greenwald, "SEAC Input-Output System." Proceedings of the Joint
AIEE-IRE-ACM Computer Conference, New York, December 70-12, 1952.
Ruth C. Haueter, "Auxiliary Equipment to SEAC Input-Output."
Proceedings of the Joint AIEE-IRE-ACM Computer Conference, New York,
December 10-12, 1952.
James L. Pike, "Input-Output Devices Used with SEAC." Proceedings of the
Joint A(EE-IRE-ACM Computer Conference, New York, December 10-12, 1952.
Sidney Greenwald, R. C. Haueter, and
S.N. Alexander, "SEAL." Proceedings of the IRE 41, 1953.
NBS SWAC
Parts of the SWAC are on exhibit at the National Bureau of Standards
Museum and the Museum of Science and Industry Los Angeles.
Library Division, National Bureau of Standards, Washington, D.C.
Archives, Division of Mathematics, National Museum of American History
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
H. D. Huskey "Characteristics of the Institute for Numerical Analysis
Computer." Mathematical Tables and Other Aids to Consultation 4, 1950.
H. D. Huskey R. Thorensen, B. F Ambrosio, and E. G. Yowell, "The SWAC-
Design Features and Operating Experience." Proceedings of the IRE 41, 1953.
Whirlwind
Parts of Whirlwind are on exhibit at the
National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C., and The Computer Museum.
Jay Forrester, videotape of lecture at The Computer Museum, 1980.
"See It Now: Interview with Whirlwind." Excerpt from Edward R.
Murrow's CBS news program, 1951.
"Making Electrons Count." Film produced by MIT, 1953.
MIT Servomechanisms Laboratory Technical Publications File, 1944-1968,
(AC-34); MIT Digital Computer Laboratory Records, 1944-1959 (80-36);
and Magnetic Core Memory Records,
1932-1977 (MC-140). Institute Archives and Special Collections, M.LT
Libraries, Cambridge, Mass.
Corporate Archives, MITRE Corporation, Bedford, Mass.
Archives, Division of Mathematics, National Museum of American History
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
S. H. Dodd, H. Klemperer, and P Youtz, "Electrostatic Storage Tube."
Electrical Engineering 69, 1950.
Jay W Forrester, "Digital Information
Storage in Three Dimensions Using Magnetic Core." Journal of Applied
Physics 22, 1951.
R. R. Everett, "The Whirlwind I Computer." Electrical Engineering 71,
1952.
William N. Papian, "A CoincidentCurrent Magnetic Memory Cell for the
Storage of Digital Information. Proceedings of the IRE 40, 1952.
William N. Papian, "The MIT MagneticCore Memory" Proceedings of the
Joint IRE-AIEE-ACM Computer Conference, Washington, D.C., 1953.
J. W Forrester, "Multicoordinate Digital Information Storage Device." U.S.
Patent 2,736,880, issued February 28, 1956.
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